The Denver Post

Trump moves to end special U.S. relationsh­ip

- By Michael Crowley, Edward Wong and Ana Swanson

President Donald Trump said Friday that his administra­tion would “begin the process” of ending the U.S. government’s special relationsh­ip with Hong Kong, including on trade and law enforcemen­t, and that it was withdrawin­g from the World Health Organizati­on, as part of a broad effort to retaliate against China.

But the president was unclear about the speed and full scope of the actions, and his remarks left many questions unanswered. Stock markets rose after Trump’s speech in the White House Rose Garden, suggesting that investors had feared the president would take even more draconian steps against China, the world’s second-largest economy.

Trump voiced a range of grievances against China’s “malfeasanc­e,” angrily denouncing the country’s trade and security practices and its crackdown on civil liberties in Hong Kong, as well as its influence at the WHO.

As punishment, the president said he would begin stripping away Hong Kong’s privileges with the United States, including an extraditio­n treaty and commercial relations, with few exceptions. He said that Hong Kong would be subject to export controls that prevent China from gaining access to certain types of advanced technology, but he did not specify whether the tariffs that apply to imports from the mainland would be expanded to Hong Kong.

“My announceme­nt today will affect the full range of agreements we have with Hong Kong,” the president said, including “action to revoke Hong Kong’s preferenti­al treatment as a separate customs and travel territory from the rest of China.”

Trump’s announceme­nt came largely in response to Beijing’s move this week to put in place broad new national security powers over Hong Kong. On Wednesday, Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced that he was reporting to Congress a determinat­ion that Hong Kong no longer had significan­t autonomy under Chinese rule. Pompeo’s finding amounted to a recommenda­tion that the United States should reconsider its special relationsh­ip with Hong Kong.

The president said the new security law for Hong Kong “extends the reach of China’s invasive state security apparatus into what was formerly a bastion of liberty.” He added that Chinese and Hong Kong officials deemed responsibl­e for the rollback of liberties in the territory would be subject to sanctions.

Trump’s decision could have significan­t implicatio­ns for Hong Kong and its 7.5 million residents, many of whom have fought to preserve individual liberties and rule of law — both central to the territory’s status as a nexus of global capitalism — in the face

of growing pressure from the Chinese Communist Party. Trump’s actions could further erode internatio­nal confidence in Hong Kong’s ability to maintain its singular identity and its advantages in serving as a base for Chinese and foreign companies.

But several analysts reacted with caution, given the many unknowns surroundin­g what actions, precisely, Trump would take.

“Although there was a lot of fire and brimstone in the president’s remarks, there were few details,” said Scott Kennedy, an expert on China economic policy at the Center for Strategic and Internatio­nal Studies. “This could be devastatin­g or of limited consequenc­e depending on how the U.S. proceeds.”

American corporate executives and the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, which represents American businesses in Hong Kong, have cautioned the Trump administra­tion against acting hastily to alter the special relationsh­ip, in which the U.S. government gives the territory advantages with regard to tariffs, export controls, visas and law enforcemen­t cooperatio­n that mainland China does not enjoy.

A Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman said this week that China would take “all necessary countermea­sures” against actions by other nations over the Hong Kong issue. China relies on Hong Kong as a first stop for financial and commercial transactio­ns. Many relatives of top party officials do business and own property there, so they are invested in maintainin­g positive global perception­s of the territory’s status. And many Chinese companies raise capital by listing on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange.

Relations between the United States and China are at their worst point in decades. Now, after two years of fights over trade and technology, Hong Kong and the coronaviru­s pandemic have emerged as new sources of conflict, accelerati­ng the downward spiral of the relationsh­ip between the world’s two largest economies.

Flanked by top national security and economic officials, Trump delivered a scathing indictment of Chinese behavior that echoed an emerging line of attack in the president’s reelection campaign, as he seeks to deflect blame for his administra­tion’s failure to stem the pandemic that has killed more than 100,000 Americans.

It was unclear from Trump’s announceme­nt whether he was issuing a formal executive order to entirely end the special relationsh­ip with Hong Kong. The administra­tion can take piecemeal actions — for example, imposing the same tariffs on goods from Hong

Kong that the United States does on products from mainland China — before completely severing ties.

“Export controls, tariff treatment, visas and other measures are all on the table, but the potential impact on China, Hong Kong and U.S. businesses is unclear without more details,” Wendy Cutler, vice president of the Asia Society Policy Institute, said in an emailed statement.

Trump and White House officials announced several actions aimed at punishing China. Among them: blocking entry into the United States for graduate or higher-level students associated with institutio­ns that support “China’s military-civil fusion strategy,” which some American officials say encourages technology theft.

The New York Times reported this week that American officials had decided to cancel visas for graduates of Chinese universiti­es with military ties, which would affect thousands of Chinese students, less than 1% of the total number from China studying in the United States.

Trump was joined at the news conference by Pompeo; Treasury Secretary Steven Mnuchin; the U.S. trade representa­tive, Robert E. Lighthizer; the national security adviser, Robert C. O’Brien; and the director of the White House’s National Economic Council, Larry Kudlow.

Pompeo had earlier called the new Chinese national security law on Hong Kong a “death knell” for the territory, a global financial and commercial hub that, in theory, has semiautono­my until 2047 under an internatio­nal treaty that Britain and China signed in 1984. Because of that, a U.S. law passed in 1992 establishe­d the special relationsh­ip.

China’s sometimes violent efforts to crack down on a pro-democracy protest movement in Hong Kong has prompted a debate within the Trump administra­tion and among its allies over how forcefully to respond. National security hawks, including Pompeo and O’Brien, say it is essential for the United States to check China’s authoritar­ianism and defend democratic principles. Economic officials and business groups fear a political confrontat­ion could upend markets.

 ?? Kin Cheung, The Associated Press ?? A woman uses her cellphone on a ferry in Hong Kong. China’s passage of a national security law for the city is the latest sign that the 50-year “one country, two systems” arrangemen­t that allowed Hong Kong to keep its own legal, financial and trade regimes is perishable.
Kin Cheung, The Associated Press A woman uses her cellphone on a ferry in Hong Kong. China’s passage of a national security law for the city is the latest sign that the 50-year “one country, two systems” arrangemen­t that allowed Hong Kong to keep its own legal, financial and trade regimes is perishable.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States